Presentation Rubric - SOEST

Ideas are not presented in proper
order; transition are lacking between
major ideas; several parts of
presentation are wordy or unclear
Presentation does not provide
adequate depth; key details are
omitted or undeveloped; presentation
is too short or too long
Presentation contains several major
grammar/usage errors; sentences
are long, incomplete or contain
excessive jargon
Little or no message support
provided for major ideas; visual aids
are missing or inadequate; little or no
sourcing provided
Low volume or energy; pace too slow
or fast; poor diction; distracting
gestures or posture; unprofessional
appearance; visual aids poorly used
B. Organization/Clarity
Appropriate introduction, body, and
conclusions; logical ordering of ideas;
transitions between major points
C. Completeness
Level of detail, depth, appropriate length,
adequate background of information
D. Grammar/Mechanics
Correct grammar and usage that is
appropriate for audience(s)
E. Documentation
Proper support and sourcing for major
ideas, inclusion of visual aids that support
message
F. Delivery
Adequate volume, appropriate pace,
diction, personal appearance,
enthusiasm/energy, posture, effective use
of visual aids
1Evaluation
Additional eye contact needed at times;
better listening skills needed; some
difficulty answering audience questions
More volume/energy needed at times;
pace too slow or fast; some distracting
gestures or posture; adequate
appearance; visual aids could be
improved
Some message support provided by
facts and visual aids; sourcing may be
outdated or thin, visual aids need work
Presentation may contain some
grammar or sentence errors; sentences
may contain jargon or are too long or
hard to follow
Additional depth needed in places;
important information omitted or not
fully developed; presentation is too
short or too long
Some ideas not presented in proper
order; transitions are needed between
some ideas; some parts of presentation
may be wordy or unclear
Topic would benefit from more focus;
presentation contains some fact errors
or omissions
Purdue University
Fairly good eye contact with audience;
displays ability to listen; provides adequate
answers to audience questions
Adequate volume and energy; generally
good pace and diction; few or no distracting
gestures; professional appearance; visual
aids used adequately
Adequate message support provided for key
concepts by facts and visual aids; sourcing
is generally adequate and current
Presentation has no serious grammar
errors; sentences are mostly jargon-free,
complete and understandable
Presentation provides adequate depth; few
needed details are omitted; major ideas
adequately developed; presentation is
within specified length
Most ideas are in logical order with
adequate transitions between most major
ideas; presentation is generally clear and
understandable
Topic is adequately focused and relevant;
major facts are accurate and generally
complete
standards may be based on disciplinary frameworks and defined at program level.
Little or no eye contact with
audience; poor listening skills;
uneasiness or inability to answer
audience questions
Topic lacks relevance or focus;
presentation contains multiple fact
errors
A. Content
Importance of topic, relevance, accuracy
of facts, overall treatment of topic
G. Interactions
Adequate eye contact with audience,
ability to listen and/or answer questions

Final
Presentation
First
Presentation
Good eye contact with audience;
excellent listening skills; answers
audience questions with authority and
accuracy
Good volume and energy; proper pace
and diction; avoidance of distracting
gestures; professional appearance;
visual aids used effectively
Effective message support provided in
the form of facts and visual aids;
sourcing is current and supports major
ideas
Presentation contains no grammar
errors; sentences are free of jargon,
complete and easy to understand
Presentation provides good depth and
detail; ideas well developed; facts have
adequate background; presentation is
within specified length
Ideas are presented in logical order with
effective transitions between major
ideas; presentation is clear and concise
Topic is tightly focused and relevant;
presentation contains accurate
information with no fact errors
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Developing
Proficient
Mastery
1
2
3
4
Date:
Evaluator:
Criteria1
Course/Context:
College of Science
Student:
Oral Presentation Rubric 
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